McCahon v. Comm'rs of Leavenworth Co.

8 Kan. 437 | Kan. | 1871

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yalkntinb, J.:

Only one question requires our special consideration in this case, and that is, whether John T. McWhirt and certain other persons acting with him were on the 16th of March, 1869, de facto the board of county commissioners of the county of Leavenworth. That they were not de jwre said board, and that there was another set of men who were de jwre said board, is conceded by both parties; but it is claimed by the plaintiff in error that said McWhirt and his associates were de facto said board.

On the 16th of March, 1869, the plaintiff presented to said McWhirt and his associates an account against said county for professional services as an attorney-at-law, and said McWhirt and his associates allowed it. The plaintiff then sued the county upon this allowance and not unon the original account. The counsel for the defendants not only claims that McWhirt and his associates were not the board of county commissioners either de jure or de facto, but he also claims that said account was illegal and void; that it was for services performed for said McWhirt and his associates as individuals, and not for the county of Leavenworth, nor for said McWhirt and his associates as officers; and that even if performed for the county, or for said McWhirt and his associates as officers, still the services were such as could be performed by the county attorney only, and therefore in any case the allowance itself was illegal and void, as the said plaintiff was not the county attorney. Eut as the plaintiff has not stated the nature of his said services in his petition below, and as none of the .evidence introduced on the trial has been brought to this court, and as *442the findings of the court below do not sufficiently show the character of his said services, we cannot determine this question with any degree of certainty and shall therefore not consider it.

Were said McWhirt and his associates de facto the board of county commissioners of the county of Leavenworth? The court below' finds that “ they were neither the county commissioners de jure nor de facto, but w.ere usurpers, and had no authority to audit and allow the plaintiff’s account;” and this finding we think is in harmony with the other findings. A de facto officer must be in fact the officer. He must be in the actual possession of the office, and have the same under his actual control. De facto means, in law, as well as elsewhere, “of fact; from, arising out of, or founded in fact; in fact, in deed; in point of fact; actually; really.” Burrell’s Law Diet. If the officer dejwre is in possession of the office; if the officer de jure is also the officer de facto, then no other person can be an officer defacto for that office. Two persons cannot be officers de facto for the same office at the same time: Boardman v. Holliday, 10 Paige, 223, 232; Morgan v. Quackenbush, 22 Barb., 72, 80. And where an office has been created to be held by one person only, two or more persons cannot hold the same as tenants in common. In the present case the regular and de jure board of county commissioners were elected in November, 1867. They would, under the law, hold their offices until the second Monday of January, 1870: Art. 11, § 3, Const.; Comp. Laws, 500, § 40; Gen. Stat., 418, § 58; Leavenworth Co. v. The State ex rel. Latta, 5 Kas., 688. They had been in the actual possession, and had the exclusive control of their respective offices for more than a year before McWhirt and his associates claimed to be county commissioners. There is nothing iu the record of this case that shows that any one of the offices had become vacant, nothing that shows that any one of such officers had died, resigned, removed from his district, or from the county, or had been removed from his office. There is nothing that shows that such officers or any one of them were ever ousted from office, or that they ever in any *443manner abandoned tbe same; but they continued to be defacto as well as de ¡u/re county commissioners down to the time of the trial of this case; hence there was no room for MeWhirt and his associates to become de facto county commissioners. Such offices were already filled by officers de facto and de ¡v/re.

Whether MeWhirt and his associates had any color of right to said offices we do not choose to consider. The election under which they claimed was void, as there was no vacancy in the office of county commissioners at the time they were elected. (Leavenworth Co. v. Latta, 5 Kas., 688.) No canvass was ever made of said election except by themselves. The record does not show that they were ever recognized as county commissioners by any one except themselves and the plaintiff. No board or officer or person (except themselves and the plaintiff) ever declared them to be the board of county commissioners. Under these circumstances did they act under color of right? (People ex rel. Kearney v. Carter, 29 Barb., 208.) Neither do we choose to consider whether MeWhirt and his associates could become officers de facto in the place of officers de ¡u/re who were already in possession, unless they got possession of the office without a contest; or if they got it through a contest whether they could become officers defacto in such a case until the contest should be ended or abandoned by the other party. (The State v. Jones, 19 Ind., 356.) This would probably have been one of the main questions in the case if all the facts had been presented to the court.

MeWhirt and his associates never got possession of said offices. If they had been legally elected they should have taken possession of said offices on January 11th, 1869. (Gen. Stat.. 418, § 58.) But they did not attempt to take possession of the same until February 2d, 1869. Then they met without any authority whatever, it not being the time for the board to meet, and being just one day after the regular board had adjourned, and declared themselves to be the board of county commissioners of Leavenworth county; but no other person, board, or officer, except the plaintiff, ever recognized them as *444such. We are now speaking of what the record in this case shows. Possibly the facts may have been different. It is true, they met together in the cleric’s office,” and the clerk “kept a record of their proceedings;” but the clerk never attested such record with his signature, nor with the seal of the county, as he does the record of the proceedings of the legally constituted board of county commissioners. (Gen. Stat., 263, § 43.) It seems the clerk did not choose to recognize them as a board of county commissioners. There is nothing to show that this record which was kept by the clerk was kept in the books of the county. It does not seem from the record in this case that MeWhirt and his associates ever got possession of any of the property of the county, or of any of the records, books, papers, the seal, or of anything else belonging to the county or connected in any manner with the office of county commissioners. The clerk ceased to keep any record of their proceedings eight days before the said allowance of the said plaintiff’s account, and no record of any kind was ever made of such allowance, and no county order was ever issued therefor. Under the circumstances of this case we do not think that MbWhirt and his associates can be considered as county commissioners de facto. The judgment of the court below must therefore be affirmed.

Kingman, O. J., concurring. Brewer, J., did not sit in the case.
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